Miles Gallan on THE LOST BOYZ: "I Don't Care About Mainstream; I care About Connection"
Miles Gallan doesn’t do press the normal way. No camera, no face, no polished PR talk. Just a voice coming through the screen, glitchy but confident. With his new project THE LOST BOYZ on the horizon, Gallan is ready to explain why this record might be the most important thing he’s done so far.
Q: The title feels like a statement. Who are “The Lost Boyz”?
Miles Gallan: They’re me. They’re you. They’re the kids who grew up on cracked software and broken Wi-Fi signals. They’re the ones who built their own culture on forums, in basements, late at night when nobody else was watching. The Lost Boyz are outsiders who decided that being outsiders together is enough.
Q: DJ KLEAN is listed as the narrator. Why bring in a narrator at all?
Miles Gallan: Albums should feel like worlds. DJ KLEAN is the one holding the flashlight while you walk through mine. He connects the dots, he talks to you, sometimes he even talks for you. Without him, it would just be songs. With him, it’s a trip.
Q: You’re giving this album away for free. That’s not exactly a mainstream move.
Miles Gallan: I don’t care about the mainstream. I care about connection. THE LOST BOYZ isn’t supposed to live inside a streaming app that doesn’t even care if you listen. I want it moving hand to hand, URL to URL. If someone wants to pay, cool. If not, cool. The music still gets where it needs to go.
Q: Sonically, what are we stepping into here?
Miles Gallan: Imagine a mixtape that got hacked by the future. Raw verses, blown-out beats, pretty chords, then a drop into static and noise. It’s not “clean.” It’s alive. It’s everything I’ve absorbed off the internet thrown back at the world.
Q: “& co.” shows up in the credits. Who’s in the crew?
Miles Gallan: Some names you’ll recognize. Some you won’t. Some are just voices, some are whole songs. That’s the point — the Lost Boyz don’t have a fixed lineup. Anyone can join. If your energy fits, you’re in.
Q: What’s the takeaway you want listeners to leave with?
Miles Gallan: That being lost isn’t failure. It’s freedom. The second you stop chasing approval and start building your own lane, you’re part of the Lost Boyz. That’s the message.
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